Favipiravir at high doses has potent antiviral activity in SARS-CoV-2−infected hamsters, whereas hydroxychloroquine lacks activity

Author:

Kaptein Suzanne J. F.ORCID,Jacobs SofieORCID,Langendries LanaORCID,Seldeslachts LauraORCID,ter Horst SebastiaanORCID,Liesenborghs LaurensORCID,Hens BartORCID,Vergote ValentijnORCID,Heylen ElisabethORCID,Barthelemy Karine,Maas Elke,De Keyzer Carolien,Bervoets Lindsey,Rymenants JasperORCID,Van Buyten Tina,Zhang XinORCID,Abdelnabi RanaORCID,Pang JuanitaORCID,Williams Rachel,Thibaut Hendrik JanORCID,Dallmeier KaiORCID,Boudewijns RobbertORCID,Wouters Jens,Augustijns PatrickORCID,Verougstraete NickORCID,Cawthorne ChristopherORCID,Breuer JudithORCID,Solas CarolineORCID,Weynand BirgitORCID,Annaert PieterORCID,Spriet Isabel,Vande Velde GreetjeORCID,Neyts JohanORCID,Rocha-Pereira JoanaORCID,Delang LeenORCID

Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) rapidly spread around the globe after its emergence in Wuhan in December 2019. With no specific therapeutic and prophylactic options available, the virus has infected millions of people of which more than half a million succumbed to the viral disease, COVID-19. The urgent need for an effective treatment together with a lack of small animal infection models has led to clinical trials using repurposed drugs without preclinical evidence of their in vivo efficacy. We established an infection model in Syrian hamsters to evaluate the efficacy of small molecules on both infection and transmission. Treatment of SARS-CoV-2−infected hamsters with a low dose of favipiravir or hydroxychloroquine with(out) azithromycin resulted in, respectively, a mild or no reduction in virus levels. However, high doses of favipiravir significantly reduced infectious virus titers in the lungs and markedly improved lung histopathology. Moreover, a high dose of favipiravir decreased virus transmission by direct contact, whereas hydroxychloroquine failed as prophylaxis. Pharmacokinetic modeling of hydroxychloroquine suggested that the total lung exposure to the drug did not cause the failure. Our data on hydroxychloroquine (together with previous reports in macaques and ferrets) thus provide no scientific basis for the use of this drug in COVID-19 patients. In contrast, the results with favipiravir demonstrate that an antiviral drug at nontoxic doses exhibits a marked protective effect against SARS-CoV-2 in a small animal model. Clinical studies are required to assess whether a similar antiviral effect is achievable in humans without toxic effects.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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